2012 was supposed to be the year of Ryan Mathews. Burdened with unfairly high expectations as a rookie in 2010, Mathews flopped while struggling to stay healthy. It was more of the same in 2011 before a hot finish saved his reputation and burnished his fantasy credentials. Over his final five games, Mathews totaled 587 yards from scrimmage while finding the end zone three times.

He became a fantasy X-factor while buttressing his overall numbers for the year. Mathews finished as the No. 7 fantasy back despite missing two games, playing just 48 percent of the Chargers’ snaps and watching Hall-of-Fame vulture Mike Tolbert pilfer eight touchdowns.

But that was all in the past by the time 2012 fantasy drafts came around. Tolbert was gone, and Mathews had arrived, albeit a bit late. Then an old friend came knocking...

What Went Wrong

One. That’s how many carries it took Mathews to get hurt in 2012. One lousy preseason carry. The five yards Mathews gained against the Packers came with a broken clavicle, and a 4-6 week price tag. All those fantasy hipsters saying they had moved on from Mathews and his melodrama were looking right after one freaking exhibition carry.

But they weren’t right...right? After all, Mathews was only expected to miss 1-2 regular season games. Fantasy seasons aren’t won and lost in Week 1 and 2, but Week 15 and 16. Heck, Mathews hadn’t become a disappointment, but a value. Let the others pass. You’ll gladly take the 24-year-old three-down back in the second or third round.

The first part went to plan. Mathews missed only two games. The second? How does “Avalanche of Disappointment” sound? “Landslide of Sorrow”? Whatever went wrong could. A KnownFumbler™, Mathews coughed it up to the Atlanta Falcons on his seventh carry of the season. It was all downhill from there.

Yahoo’s “Top Performer” for Mathews’ return? Jackie Battle. Yes, thisJackie Battle. He rushed three times for 55 yards in a Chargers loss. Battle took the ball 95 times on the season, and found the end zone four times more often than Mathews (literally four to one).

Only the Chargers didn’t just go with a two-back backfield, but a two-vulture backfield. Mathews also had to contend with Ronnie Brown. Yes, thisRonnie Brown. The Chargers’ third-down back, Brown made 49 catches to Mathews’ 39.

Let’s drop the narrative and go straight to the numbers. In 2012, Mathews:

4. Touched the ball five times on third down. All year. This is not a joke. RYAN MATHEWS TOUCHED THE BALL ON THIRD DOWN FIVE TIMES ALL YEAR. Again, this is something Bilal Powell did in one game against the Rams.

5. Had one carry go for 20 yards or longer. One. An NFL feature back. A supposedly explosive one at that. One 20-yard carry. Isaac Redman and Jonathan Dwyer both had three 20-yard carries. 66 other players had at least two.

6. Ended his season by breaking his other clavicle, a supposedly freak occurrence. An orthopedic surgeon told the Union-Tribune San Diego in December that someone breaking both their collarbones in a four-month span is less likely to happen than getting struck by lightning.

That’s the long of it. The short? Mathews couldn’t stay healthy (again), lost the trust of his coaches (again) and failed to produce with any sort of consistency (again).

On Film

What stands out most is how little Mathews got around the edge. For a supposedly explosive back, a discouraging number of Mathews’ runs got corralled between the tackles in 2012.

You never want a runner to rely on busting out wide and motoring around the edge, but it’s a talent every feature back must possess. Aside from his season-best game against the hapless Saints in Week 5, Mathews was shockingly inept at extending runs outside and getting upfield for big gains. It’s why just one of Mathews’ 184 carries gained more than 20 yards, and none more than 31.

It’s not because Mathews isn’t a fast back. He is. But his initial acceleration was lacking in 2012. He took forever to get going, requiring too many steps to get a full head of steam. His short stride suddenly began to make him look smaller than he is (6-foot-0, 220 pounds), and resulted in Mathews running into piles and...running in place. Perhaps it’s because he missed out on so much conditioning time in camp and the preseason.

Mathews didn’t go down at the first sign of contact, but he scarcely went through it, either. Too often, his legs would move, but his body wouldn’t. He rarely emerged from the first wave of defenders with extra yards, and didn’t come close to breaking enough tackles (only 16 by Pro Football Focus’ count). He wasn’t afraid to take on linebackers, it’s just that when he did, he almost always lost.

Neither Mathews’ cuts nor vision are any better than “average,” while his feet could be considered “poor.” Mathews lost his footing with troubling frequency in 2012. He wore down as games progressed. On his 1st-10th carries of any given game, Mathews averaged 4.2 yards. 11-20? 3.6. 21-30...? An embarrassing 2.0.

Mathews also wore down as the season wore on, losing one-on-ones at a far greater rate while averaging just 3.2 yards per carry over his final 89 totes. That’s after he averaged 4.4 on his first 85.

If there was one obvious positive, it was Mathews’ receiving ability. He’s deceptive but deliberate when leaking out on screens, and has soft hands. He pulled in 39-of-56 targets from Philip Rivers, with the vast majority of their misconnections being the fault of his quarterback.

Scandals of the century.

The 19th had the Civil War. The 20th had Watergate and the Teapot Dome.

2012 was supposed to be the year of Ryan Mathews. Burdened with unfairly high expectations as a rookie in 2010, Mathews flopped while struggling to stay healthy. It was more of the same in 2011 before a hot finish saved his reputation and burnished his fantasy credentials. Over his final five games, Mathews totaled 587 yards from scrimmage while finding the end zone three times.

He became a fantasy X-factor while buttressing his overall numbers for the year. Mathews finished as the No. 7 fantasy back despite missing two games, playing just 48 percent of the Chargers’ snaps and watching Hall-of-Fame vulture Mike Tolbert pilfer eight touchdowns.

But that was all in the past by the time 2012 fantasy drafts came around. Tolbert was gone, and Mathews had arrived, albeit a bit late. Then an old friend came knocking...

What Went Wrong

One. That’s how many carries it took Mathews to get hurt in 2012. One lousy preseason carry. The five yards Mathews gained against the Packers came with a broken clavicle, and a 4-6 week price tag. All those fantasy hipsters saying they had moved on from Mathews and his melodrama were looking right after one freaking exhibition carry.

But they weren’t right...right? After all, Mathews was only expected to miss 1-2 regular season games. Fantasy seasons aren’t won and lost in Week 1 and 2, but Week 15 and 16. Heck, Mathews hadn’t become a disappointment, but a value. Let the others pass. You’ll gladly take the 24-year-old three-down back in the second or third round.

The first part went to plan. Mathews missed only two games. The second? How does “Avalanche of Disappointment” sound? “Landslide of Sorrow”? Whatever went wrong could. A KnownFumbler™, Mathews coughed it up to the Atlanta Falcons on his seventh carry of the season. It was all downhill from there.

Yahoo’s “Top Performer” for Mathews’ return? Jackie Battle. Yes, thisJackie Battle. He rushed three times for 55 yards in a Chargers loss. Battle took the ball 95 times on the season, and found the end zone four times more often than Mathews (literally four to one).

Only the Chargers didn’t just go with a two-back backfield, but a two-vulture backfield. Mathews also had to contend with Ronnie Brown. Yes, thisRonnie Brown. The Chargers’ third-down back, Brown made 49 catches to Mathews’ 39.

Let’s drop the narrative and go straight to the numbers. In 2012, Mathews:

4. Touched the ball five times on third down. All year. This is not a joke. RYAN MATHEWS TOUCHED THE BALL ON THIRD DOWN FIVE TIMES ALL YEAR. Again, this is something Bilal Powell did in one game against the Rams.

5. Had one carry go for 20 yards or longer. One. An NFL feature back. A supposedly explosive one at that. One 20-yard carry. Isaac Redman and Jonathan Dwyer both had three 20-yard carries. 66 other players had at least two.

6. Ended his season by breaking his other clavicle, a supposedly freak occurrence. An orthopedic surgeon told the Union-Tribune San Diego in December that someone breaking both their collarbones in a four-month span is less likely to happen than getting struck by lightning.

That’s the long of it. The short? Mathews couldn’t stay healthy (again), lost the trust of his coaches (again) and failed to produce with any sort of consistency (again).

On Film

What stands out most is how little Mathews got around the edge. For a supposedly explosive back, a discouraging number of Mathews’ runs got corralled between the tackles in 2012.

You never want a runner to rely on busting out wide and motoring around the edge, but it’s a talent every feature back must possess. Aside from his season-best game against the hapless Saints in Week 5, Mathews was shockingly inept at extending runs outside and getting upfield for big gains. It’s why just one of Mathews’ 184 carries gained more than 20 yards, and none more than 31.

It’s not because Mathews isn’t a fast back. He is. But his initial acceleration was lacking in 2012. He took forever to get going, requiring too many steps to get a full head of steam. His short stride suddenly began to make him look smaller than he is (6-foot-0, 220 pounds), and resulted in Mathews running into piles and...running in place. Perhaps it’s because he missed out on so much conditioning time in camp and the preseason.

Mathews didn’t go down at the first sign of contact, but he scarcely went through it, either. Too often, his legs would move, but his body wouldn’t. He rarely emerged from the first wave of defenders with extra yards, and didn’t come close to breaking enough tackles (only 16 by Pro Football Focus’ count). He wasn’t afraid to take on linebackers, it’s just that when he did, he almost always lost.

Neither Mathews’ cuts nor vision are any better than “average,” while his feet could be considered “poor.” Mathews lost his footing with troubling frequency in 2012. He wore down as games progressed. On his 1st-10th carries of any given game, Mathews averaged 4.2 yards. 11-20? 3.6. 21-30...? An embarrassing 2.0.

Mathews also wore down as the season wore on, losing one-on-ones at a far greater rate while averaging just 3.2 yards per carry over his final 89 totes. That’s after he averaged 4.4 on his first 85.

If there was one obvious positive, it was Mathews’ receiving ability. He’s deceptive but deliberate when leaking out on screens, and has soft hands. He pulled in 39-of-56 targets from Philip Rivers, with the vast majority of their misconnections being the fault of his quarterback.

What Could Still Go Right

So we’ve established Mathews’ 2012 was a disaster. What we need to know is, is Mathews’ career going down in flames, or is there still hope for him to emerge as the player we’ve always thought he could be?

The first place to look for hope (or despair) is new coach Mike McCoy. An offensive coordinator for the past four seasons, we should be able to glean some patterns from his running back usage, right? Well...not exactly.

In McCoy’s four years on the job, the Broncos ranked higher than 16th in rushing only once. That would be 2011, when Denver led the league in rushing yards. Awesome, right? Well, no. You may remember there was something unique about the 2011 Broncos, a running quarterback named Tim Tebow.

McCoy dialed up more runs than anyone else in the league in 2011, but hardly by choice. His other three years on the job, the Broncos finished 16th, 26th and 18th in the league in rushing, averaging 109 yards per game and 440 rushes per season.

Those are the numbers of a man who doesn’t disdain the run, but hardly embraces it. Only even those numbers are inconclusive. That’s because McCoy’s tenure in Denver was marked by one peculiarity after another. In 2009-10, McCoy may have been the Broncos’ “offensive coordinator,” but he was hardly the offensive boss. Those duties fell to head coach Josh McDaniels, who left no doubt as to whom was running the show during his whirlwind 1.5 year stay in the Rockies.

Leaping forward two years, McCoy no longer had McDaniels or Tebow lording over his shoulder, but someone else you may have heard of: Peyton Manning. It’s little secret that though Manning is open to input, he’s essentially his own coordinator on the field. It’s Manning who spots the soft fronts his passing prowess commands and checks into runs, not his offensive coordinator.

So what we have with McCoy is a man who’s overseen four offenses, but could never outrun his extenuating circumstances, and had little-to-no chance to implement his own vision. There’s plenty of reason to believe McCoy was doing something right in Denver, but little empirical evidence to hint at what he might do once he’s finally calling the shots.

But there’s no shortage of anecdotal evidence, and most of it screams “pass.” In McCoy’s 12 years as an NFL assistant, he’s held the titles “WRs Coach,” “QBs Coach” and “Passing Game Coordinator” in addition to offensive coordinator. Notice there’s no “RBs Coach” or “OL Coach” sprinkled in for fun.

There’s also the matter of his offensive coordinator, Ken Whisenhunt. McCoy has pledged to let Whiz call his own plays, and when Whiz has been responsible for the plays, they’ve typically been passes. Whisenhunt’s Cardinals ranked No. 32 in the NFL in rushing attempts last season even though they were alternating between a veritable three stooges at quarterback in Kevin Kolb, Ryan Lindley and John Skelton.

In Whisenhunt’s six years in the desert, the Cardinals never finished better than 25th in rushing attempts. They finished dead last four different times, and an average of 30th. Whiz was just as unlikely to run under an elite quarterback (No. 32 in 2008 and 2009 with Kurt Warner at the controls) as he was under a terrible one (No. 32 in 2010 with Derek Anderson and company, 2012). What he has in Philip Rivers is something in between.

So if the Chargers’ new offensive overseers are planning to make Mathews a focal point of their offense, their history wouldn’t suggest it. In the slightest. At all.

But to focus on how Mathews’ coaches might utilize him is to ignore the most important part of the story: Mathews’ history of injuries, underwhelming production and general inability to earn the trust of anyone, from his coaches to his fantasy owners.

This has all already been laid out in excruciating detail, but in bullet-point form Mathews has:

— Missed an average of three games per season. — Suffered multiple injuries to both his lower and upper body, soft-tissue ailments as well as clean breaks. — Averaged one lost fumble for every 5.4 games he’s played. — Time and again failed to distinguish himself as a runner. (See all the depressing stats and numbers above.)

Our Best Guess For 2013

Mathews has already turned the page on 2012: He’s called it "just a bad year," and believes he still has "what it takes to reach that next level.” The “next level” is what he’s pledged to arrive at in 2013.

Free agents, Jackie Battle and Ronnie Brown will both likely be gone. A coach who had clearly lost faith in a player he traded up 16 spots to draft, Norval Turner, already is.

But there will undoubtedly be a new Battle, a new Brown. There are new coaches whose histories suggest they’ll come up with fresh and exciting ways to avoid running the ball. Per the Union-Tribune San Diego — which has its finger on the pulse of Chargers affairs as few other hometown papers do — there is "some doubt" in the organization Mathews will ever develop into "the player that was envisioned three years ago."

Mathews is still young, and he’s still optimistic. If there’s a silver lining to his injury history, it’s that there’s relatively little tread on his tires after three NFL seasons. But the reasons for doubt with Mathews far outnumber the reasons for hope. Even as part of a likely committee, Mathews should be the chairman. He will provide fantasy value when he takes the field. But how often he’s able to take the field will remain an open question, and how often he disappoints fantasy owners should likely remain an open wound.

The best-case scenario for Mathews still involves him emerging as a true lead back and fantasy RB1. Our best guess, however, involves more of the same. Injury, disappointment and a whole lot of “what was I thinking in August?”